How to Boil Water
Plus, a good use for old bread
This Mediterranean classic, as ancient and almost as simple as boiling, is the quintessential beginner’s or just-plain-basic soup. It’s one you’ll cook forever.
The thick-sliced bread transforms both the bread and the soup into something heartier and satisfying. While it’s fine and even preferable to use old bread, the better the bread, the better the outcome (though that’s true for most ingredients).
“Boiled Water”
Makes: 4 servings
Time: 20 minutes
Time: 20 minutes
Ingredients
6 to 10 cloves garlic, lightly crushed
1 bay leaf
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
4 thick slices French or Italian bread (slightly stale bread is fine)
1/2 cup freshly grated Parmesan or pecorino Romano cheese
Chopped fresh parsley leaves for garnish
Instructions
Combine 4 cups water with the garlic, bay leaf, and some salt and pepper in a saucepan or stockpot. Bring to a boil, cover partially, and turn the heat to very low. Let the liquid bubble gently for 15 minutes.
Meanwhile, put the olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat. When hot, brown the slices of bread in the oil, turning once, for a total of about 5 minutes.
Put the bread in bowls and top with the grated cheese. Strain the soup into the bowls, garnish with parsley, and serve.
Roasted Garlic Soup
Substitute 10 or more cloves of roasted garlic for the crushed garlic. Or put the crushed garlic in the skillet with the olive oil and cook over medium-low heat until fragrant and just starting to color, about 4 minutes. Fish out the garlic, chop it finely and add it to the pot in step 1.
Tomato-Garlic Soup
Add 2 cups chopped tomato (canned is OK; don’t drain) in step 1. Don’t strain the soup.
Lime-Garlic-Coconut Soup
Omit the olive oil, bread, and cheese. Juice and zest 2 limes. In step 1, use 1 can of coconut milk and 3 cups of water, along with the lime zest. Omit step 2. In step 3, add the lime juice to the soup right before straining. If you like, ladle the soup over a small mound of plain white rice, bean threads, or rice vermicelli. Garnish with cilantro instead of parsley.
— Recipe from How to Cook Everything
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